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High Axial Ratio Nanochitins for Ultrastrong and Shape-Recoverable Hydrogels and Cryogels via Ice Templating

[Image: see text] High yield (>85%) and low-energy deconstruction of never-dried residual marine biomass is proposed following partial deacetylation and microfluidization. This process results in chitin nanofibrils (nanochitin, NCh) of ultrahigh axial size (aspect ratios of up to 500), one of the...

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Autores principales: Liu, Liang, Bai, Long, Tripathi, Anurodh, Yu, Juan, Wang, Zhiguo, Borghei, Maryam, Fan, Yimin, Rojas, Orlando J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2019
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6439435/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30689367
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.8b07235
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author Liu, Liang
Bai, Long
Tripathi, Anurodh
Yu, Juan
Wang, Zhiguo
Borghei, Maryam
Fan, Yimin
Rojas, Orlando J.
author_facet Liu, Liang
Bai, Long
Tripathi, Anurodh
Yu, Juan
Wang, Zhiguo
Borghei, Maryam
Fan, Yimin
Rojas, Orlando J.
author_sort Liu, Liang
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] High yield (>85%) and low-energy deconstruction of never-dried residual marine biomass is proposed following partial deacetylation and microfluidization. This process results in chitin nanofibrils (nanochitin, NCh) of ultrahigh axial size (aspect ratios of up to 500), one of the largest for bioderived nanomaterials. The nanochitins are colloidally stable in water (ζ-potential = +95 mV) and produce highly entangled networks upon pH shift. Viscoelastic and strong hydrogels are formed by ice templating upon freezing and thawing with simultaneous cross-linking. Slow supercooling and ice nucleation at −20 °C make ice crystals grow slowly and exclude nanochitin and cross-linkers, becoming spatially confined at the interface. At a nanochitin concentration as low as 0.4 wt %, highly viscoelastic hydrogels are formed, with a storage modulus of ∼16 kPa, at least an order of magnitude larger compared to those measured for the strongest chitin-derived hydrogels reported so far. Moreover, the water absorption capacity of the hydrogels reaches a value of 466 g g(–1). Lyophilization is effective in producing cryogels with a density that can be tailored in a wide range of values, from 0.89 to 10.83 mg·cm(–3), and corresponding porosity, between 99.24 and 99.94%. Nitrogen adsorption results indicate reversible adsorption and desorption cycles of macroporous structures. A fast shape recovery is registered from compressive stress–strain hysteresis loops. After 80% compressive strain, the cryogels recovered fast and completely upon load release. The extreme values in these and other physical properties have not been achieved before for neither chitin nor nanocellulosic cryogels. They are explained to be the result of (a) the ultrahigh axial ratio of the fibrils and strong covalent interactions; (b) the avoidance of drying before and during processing, a subtle but critical aspect in nanomanufacturing with biobased materials; and (c) ice templating, which makes the hydrogels and cryogels suitable for advanced biobased materials.
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spelling pubmed-64394352019-04-01 High Axial Ratio Nanochitins for Ultrastrong and Shape-Recoverable Hydrogels and Cryogels via Ice Templating Liu, Liang Bai, Long Tripathi, Anurodh Yu, Juan Wang, Zhiguo Borghei, Maryam Fan, Yimin Rojas, Orlando J. ACS Nano [Image: see text] High yield (>85%) and low-energy deconstruction of never-dried residual marine biomass is proposed following partial deacetylation and microfluidization. This process results in chitin nanofibrils (nanochitin, NCh) of ultrahigh axial size (aspect ratios of up to 500), one of the largest for bioderived nanomaterials. The nanochitins are colloidally stable in water (ζ-potential = +95 mV) and produce highly entangled networks upon pH shift. Viscoelastic and strong hydrogels are formed by ice templating upon freezing and thawing with simultaneous cross-linking. Slow supercooling and ice nucleation at −20 °C make ice crystals grow slowly and exclude nanochitin and cross-linkers, becoming spatially confined at the interface. At a nanochitin concentration as low as 0.4 wt %, highly viscoelastic hydrogels are formed, with a storage modulus of ∼16 kPa, at least an order of magnitude larger compared to those measured for the strongest chitin-derived hydrogels reported so far. Moreover, the water absorption capacity of the hydrogels reaches a value of 466 g g(–1). Lyophilization is effective in producing cryogels with a density that can be tailored in a wide range of values, from 0.89 to 10.83 mg·cm(–3), and corresponding porosity, between 99.24 and 99.94%. Nitrogen adsorption results indicate reversible adsorption and desorption cycles of macroporous structures. A fast shape recovery is registered from compressive stress–strain hysteresis loops. After 80% compressive strain, the cryogels recovered fast and completely upon load release. The extreme values in these and other physical properties have not been achieved before for neither chitin nor nanocellulosic cryogels. They are explained to be the result of (a) the ultrahigh axial ratio of the fibrils and strong covalent interactions; (b) the avoidance of drying before and during processing, a subtle but critical aspect in nanomanufacturing with biobased materials; and (c) ice templating, which makes the hydrogels and cryogels suitable for advanced biobased materials. American Chemical Society 2019-01-28 2019-03-26 /pmc/articles/PMC6439435/ /pubmed/30689367 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.8b07235 Text en Copyright © 2019 American Chemical Society This is an open access article published under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) License (http://pubs.acs.org/page/policy/authorchoice_ccby_termsofuse.html) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the author and source are cited.
spellingShingle Liu, Liang
Bai, Long
Tripathi, Anurodh
Yu, Juan
Wang, Zhiguo
Borghei, Maryam
Fan, Yimin
Rojas, Orlando J.
High Axial Ratio Nanochitins for Ultrastrong and Shape-Recoverable Hydrogels and Cryogels via Ice Templating
title High Axial Ratio Nanochitins for Ultrastrong and Shape-Recoverable Hydrogels and Cryogels via Ice Templating
title_full High Axial Ratio Nanochitins for Ultrastrong and Shape-Recoverable Hydrogels and Cryogels via Ice Templating
title_fullStr High Axial Ratio Nanochitins for Ultrastrong and Shape-Recoverable Hydrogels and Cryogels via Ice Templating
title_full_unstemmed High Axial Ratio Nanochitins for Ultrastrong and Shape-Recoverable Hydrogels and Cryogels via Ice Templating
title_short High Axial Ratio Nanochitins for Ultrastrong and Shape-Recoverable Hydrogels and Cryogels via Ice Templating
title_sort high axial ratio nanochitins for ultrastrong and shape-recoverable hydrogels and cryogels via ice templating
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6439435/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30689367
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.8b07235
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